• 2025 was a year of reckoning for Nigerian music. Not because it lacked enduring and crossover hits, but because artists were forced to slow down and go back to the drawing board. Some artists took risks, some raced for dominance, while others made deliberate statements in a series of releases. Additionally, the underground movement made its mark with fresh and innovative sounds.

    Across genres, albums arrived with clearer intentions, deeper emotional stakes and an impressive commitment to craft. This list highlights the projects that did more than carry us through 2025 with bold sonic experiments, catchy anthems, and intimate reflections.

    20. No Sign of Weakness — Burna Boy

    In No Sign of Weakness, Burna Boy returns to familiar territory. The one that comes with snarling defiance, bravado and self-protection. But the armour now feels worn. The African Giant persona, once driven by underdog hunger, has hardened into a defensive shell. The album cycles through battle cries, ego massages and echoes of paranoia, with Burna Boy sometimes sounding more intent on guarding his legacy than expanding it.

    His trademark fusion of reggae, dancehall, afropop and r&b melodies remains. The lyricism asserts dominance, responds to detractors and reflects his own human nature. Weariness may be lurking, but Burna Boy’s prolific work rate is undeniable.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    19. 5IVE — Davido

    Davido’s 5IVE arrives as a confident and drama-free statement from an artist firmly in his element. It had a rollout that was a masterclass in modern afrobeats marketing and set up expectations for a new chapter in his sound. Musically, the album leans into afrobeats, amapiano and r&b-influenced production. Throughout 5IVE, Davido’s worldview feels triumphant and assured, echoing biblical metaphors tied to his name and celebrating resilience in both his personal and career journey.

    However, while the production value is high and features are mostly impressive, the writing often feels surface-level, especially in its treatment of love and relationships. The lyrics favour catchy phrasings over deeper, emotive songwriting. Songs like “10 Kilo” nod to an older cultural moment, while tracks like “Holy Water” and “With You” keep the momentum going. In all, 5IVE may not be Davido’s best work, but it’s a solid and memorable release that reflects his current state.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    18. CATHOLIC BOYS — Latino Perrico

    When Latino Perrico isn’t in an art studio painting on canvases, he’s writing rap verses and spitting bars that reflect his personal life, professional drive, and Igbo heritage. On his latest, Perrico’s Catholic upbringing is at the intersection of rap music. He thoughtfully examines faith, tradition and patriarchy. It’s definitely not religious, but CATHOLIC BOYS is perhaps the closest secular equivalent of what “Behold Among Men” or “Ami Nyekom Obong” is to a Catholic faithful.

    It gets more special with a verse from the legendary Modenine, and a tight-knit roster of relatable rappers like Jeriq, Shewrotee, Mxna and Quincy Raph — all from the same ethnic background and sharing the same walk of faith. This is a special homage to his Catholic upbringing. If you find priests, acolytes or altar servers looking for enjoyable rap music, send this to them.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    17. Healers Chapel — Wizard Chan

    It’s been five years since the release of Halo Halo, and Wizard Chan has stayed busy building a universe of his own. As a contemporary voice driving the Gyration style of music from the South-South, he flourishes on creativity and universal worldviews.

    In tracks like “By the River”, “In My Defence” and “Sober,” he takes a minimal but deeply introspective route, and amps up the mood on songs like “Amen (God My Dealer)” and “Oh My Home”, reflecting the joy of communal gyration. The rest of the album taps into faith and emotive musings. Healers Chapel moves between traditional and hip-hop production, evoking a sense of familiarity, relief and wonder.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    16. SUNZ ON PEGASUS — Mxps Rellington and Igho Mike

    It’s been an exciting year for Nigerian hip-hop, especially outside the label-powered mishmashes made to hustle the charts. On the other side of the radio, SUNZ ON PEGASUS grooves on soul-drenched and hazy drumless loops and body-gearing boombap. It’s refreshing, contemporary, and minimalist, yet dark and shiny enough to inspire breathtaking, street tales in precise rap verses. With experience and lessons from the trenches, Mxps Rellington and Igho Mike bring heartfelt stories that feel like a noir thriller movie.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify


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    15. AFRIKA MAGIK — Show Dem Camp

    AFRIKA MAGIK comes at a time when the world (read: Nigerian fans of Show Dem Camp) itches for, or perhaps needs, another Clone Wars-type music project. The economy is still weakened, and the standard of living is still kissing the dust. In fact, all the ills, issues and epigenetics of Nigeria that have been presented in the Clone Wars series are still prevalent today. But this isn’t that. This is contemporary Nigerian, particularly Lagos stories in a groovy, afro-centric hip-hop way.

    It’s in this realisation that one finds the beauty of this album: free-form, loose in concept and alive with vibrant features and production. In not carrying the weight of the world on their heads and shoulders, they have time to be mundane, to be like everyone else, to find their own little joys and chase inspirations and side quests.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    14. The Feast — Falz

    Since his early days as a comic content creator and rapper with several viral moments, Falz the Bahdguy has grabbed listeners’ attention with humorous, relatable pop references ranging from Nollywood’s Toyin Tomato to Skiibii’s fake death. Don’t forget Falz has catchy and killer hooks too, whether he’s dedicating an album to a personal situation or the socio-political state of the nation.

    On his sixth solo album, the qualities that brought him into the limelight remain intact, but they are now shaped by maturity rather than whimsy alone. The extremely goofy edge of his “Wazzup Guy” era has faded, replaced by a more reflective and conscious artist who turns onward to examine himself and society with greater clarity and intent. The focus and title of the album are inspired by the need to feed his fans with substantial music after a brief break. Throughout the album, he explores his place in Nigerian music, romance, body positivity, lit turn-ups, and personal history.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    13. I Dream In Colors — Magixx

    The journey of life overflows with deep waters. Magixx recounts on his debut album, I Dream In Colors, all the times he almost drowned and how he keeps his head above water. He finds resilience in his openness to let vulnerability run at the core of his debut. Magixx slows down the flow to a controlled tempo, with moody production as the album shifts from afropop and Igbo gyration to r&b, busted-and-blue chords and tungba-tinged soundscapes.

    His lyricism is honest, stark, sensual, and sometimes shallow or saccharine. But he impressively balances them with reflections on personal burdens, vices, love and relationships, loss and heartbreak, and lingering doubt and triumphs. Even while navigating struggles, I Dream In Colors carries a hope that the past may linger, today may hurt, but the future is all that really counts.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    12. Cavy In the City — The Cavemen.

    Since their early appearances on tracks with the likes of Femi Leye and Lady Donli, the musical sibling duo have ingrained themselves in the fabric of contemporary Nigerian music. From playing at the BBC Proms and the Love Supreme Jazz Festival to serving as musical directors of Wizkid’s historic More Love, Less Ego concert at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, the Okorie brothers continue to actively negotiate tradition and show younger generations that highlife still lives and breathes.

    On Cavy in the City, The Cavemen. step out of the nostalgic shadows of their debut and into a more consciously crafted, modern sound. Their music is no longer about paying homage to the music that raised them, but about expressing themselves in the present day. ROOTS and Love and Highlife are raw and rooted in imagined highlife music of the 1960s. At the same time, Cavy in the City incorporates contemporary elements without compromising the rhythmic strengths of the genre.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify


    READ NEXT: The 10 Best Nollywood Movies Of 2025


    11. Olamidé — Olamide

    This is Olamide’s twelfth album and a peek into who he is, what he likes, and how he thinks at the moment. His bursts of singing explore romance, sex and the thirst for a good time. Olamide lays it bare on the opening track, “Prelude”, echoing the efforts of finding and realising purpose.

    As the music moves from rowdy keys to bouncy afropop and dancehall pockets, Olamide keeps the groove sparkling. Tracks like “99” and “Kai” have trended across TikTok and the charts, turning his songs into instant pop hits with lasting appeal. Over a decade and a half in the game, Olamide is still consistent, relevant, churning out hits; it’s this rare mix among his peers that makes Olamidé one of 2025’s standout albums.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    10. XOXO — Lojay

    XOXO is a snapshot of Lojay’s catchy melodies, sharp songwriting, dance-ready jams, soul-rendering pop ballads and emotional complexities. All these elements that established him as a generational talent on EPs like LV N ATTN (with Sarz), GANGSTER ROMANTIC and Loveless (with JAE5) aren’t missing on his debut album.

    “Memory” recollects a heartbreak story, “Somebody Like You” throws him into a state of longing, and songs like “Mwah!”, “Shiver”, and “Miss Mariana” are sensual yearnings that are as effective as any pickup line. Lojay’s long-awaited album is here, warmly giving or demanding hugs and kisses, depending on how you see it.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    9. GE3 (The Beginning) — A-Q

    Two decades into the game, A-Q makes his best album. GE3 (The Beginning), the last of his God’s Engineering trilogy, is filled with the knowledge he has gained. He begins with his humble beginnings in Surulere, Lagos, then segues into braggadocio and the state of Nigerian hip-hop, the music business, industry politics, national history, and online validation. Despite the dense and overflowing rap verses on this album, A-Q adds colour by featuring artists such as Qing Madi, Ajebo Hustlers, Terry Apala, and Dwin, the Stoic.

    He is in his big homie phase, dropping life lessons in songs and including talents such as Blaqbonez and Bkay, which he helped push to wider audiences. A-Q raps blazingly hot, but he sounds sobering. If a curious mind asks who’s really rapping in 2025 and consistently in the last decade, the unbiased answer to the question is A-Q.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    8. This One Is Personal — Tiwa Savage

    Interview clips and excerpts that went viral during the media run of Tiwa Savage’s latest and fifth studio album might have overshadowed the music. But This One Is Personal, which she once called her last body of work, is a damn good album. It interestingly feels like a cinematic scene of a woman letting her hair down. African Number One Bad Girl relaxes the persona to let Tiwa Savage dominate.

    Just like the artwork, which sees Tiwa atop a huge pile-up of mattresses, the music is a heap of parallels. It is the crush of heartbreaks and the flames of new love, the weight of celebrity and unseen private battles, undying ambition and unseen fatigue, the emotional and psychological tolls of tabloids and trolls, self-scrutiny and grace. Above all, this is Tiwa Savage at her best, in her r&b bag.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    7. Virtuoso — Rybeena

    Rybeena is likely to end as one of the best voices of Nigerian street-pop. His songwriting equally probes existentialism (from angles of the three major religions in this part of the world) as much as it lusts for luxury and mundane experiences. When he sings, his baritone blasts out like a 5 a.m. call-to-prayer if possessed by an Ajiwere born in the digital era. The mastery and interpretation of combined multiple Yoruba music styles and modern genres into a refreshing personalised delivery is a successful attempt on Virtuoso, his debut album.

    “New Taker” is a Fuji-tinged song that reminds new money that riches come and go; when/while you (still) have, invest in what will save you on rainy days. “Ivory Coast” borrows from Makkosa. The patterns of Ebenezer Obey’s juju, as well as Simi’s alternative pop, show up in “Despasito.” The highlight is “Agba Singing”, a life-na-jeje and aspirational song that drags the crowd to an amapiano party.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    6. Fuji — Adekunle Gold

    The title of Adekunle Gold’s acclaimed yet divisive album is more a personal narrative than a special nod to Fuji music.

    The main goal of Fuji, which is also an acronym for “Finding Uncharted Journey Inside,” is that Adekunle Gold spent the past decade exploring diverse music styles, and it’s time to cross genre lines again and establish an elderly statesman, or perhaps Don Corleone status, while at it. He has earned an OG status anyway.

    Since his debut in 2014, he has remained relevant, releasing an album almost every two years, marrying a famous singer, becoming a father, collaborating globally, and appearing at several international music and fashion shows. Adekunle Gold returns with a more cultural move. He’s commanding attention like never before, and he knows it. Take the door-breaking album opener “Big Fish.” Adekunle’s very opening lines on the song go: “You know I came into the game since 24 / Ogo wey dem never see before / Make or break and I made my decision / Ni mo gbe were wole, new dispensation.” It only gets bolder from here.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify


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    5. Sweet Songs 4 You — TML Vibez and Lasmid

    Nigeria’s TML Vibez and Ghana’s Lasmid, two artists whose music usually favours the street, are at their best love-struck, heavy with emotions they can only untangle in songs. Surprisingly, Sweet Songs 4 You offers an intimate window into their inner world.

    Set against lush production, they move with personal styles and zero constraints. Anchored by their songwriting, TML Vibez and Lasmid lay bare vivid reflections on longing for lasting love, romantic getaways, canal desires, and the need to be seen beyond fame. Throughout the album, they find refreshing ways to sing about matters of the heart, and they do it with ease.

    TML Vibez is one of the most versatile street-pop artists right now. He displays how effortless it is for him to shift from hustle mode to make tracks like “ghana jollof” or “ololufe” that sound like he has been spending the last three months in the most romantic relationship and not writing about his previous grimy life in a street kid diary. Lasmid excels at maintaining creative and consistent melodies. Musically, the two of them level up here.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    4. SPIRAL — Tim Lyre

    Tim Lyre has an innate ability to tap into personal experiences. Whether it’s love, death of ego, existentialism, sonder or socio-politics, he knows how to reimagine them into a tight-knit artistic production.

    SPIRAL captures Tim Lyre at a crossroads. He’s reflecting on his past, charting his present and examining his environment. In the two-and-a-half years that it took to create this 16-track double-sided album, Tim Lyre had been in an accident, been stolen from — all these experiences transform into the narratives about loss, relationships and motivation. “Miles”, featuring Moelogo, is grounded in hope. “Economy” with Show Dem Camp explores the state of the country and the financial situation of the masses. The album closes out perfectly with “WAY/2/ME,” which mirrors Tim Lyre’s journey and his current phase of rediscovery.

    Since his SoundCloud days in the late 2010s, Tim Lyre has always expressed himself through his music. And with SPIRAL, he writes the most plainspoken and absorbing parts of that narrative so far.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    3. Chapter 1: Where Does Happiness Come From? — Made Kuti

    Four years past For(e)ward (2021), Made Kuti marches into a new adventure to find where happiness comes from. In an exhilarating 55-minute performance that’s a revolution, revival and racing respiration packed into a rave, he steep deeply into temperate admonition. Like every Afrobeat musician, Made balances political and social commentary with musical depth, confronting societal excess and violence through songs like “Life As We Know It.”

    But there’s a bigger purpose here. Chapter 1: Where Does Happiness Come From? highlights the need for genuine connection in a digitised world. It calls for a new kind of change that starts from within. It reaffirms that authentic happiness stems from individual and collective responsibility, rather than external factors.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    2. SABALI — Peruzzi

    Rebirth takes patience. Peruzzi’s new album SABALI proves that. It took him approximately 1,700 days after the release of the unappreciated two-sided Rum & Boogie album (2021). Rum & Boogie laid the foundation for his new album, showcasing an entirely new facet of Peruzzi’s artistry and songwriting, something different from the recognisable melodies of hit songs that credit him as writer and composer. On SABALI, Peruzzi makes his pen bleed, hitting on the undeserved ignore his music gets. While not making that his central theme, or necessarily presenting it as a validation dependency, he’s reproving the acknowledged fact that he’s a brilliant artist who fits in any musical pocket he finds himself in.

    He goes from the fiery drill of “El Sucio Guapo” to sensual reggae on “Legalize” and “Ecstasy” and fusions of highlife on “Cooking Pot” and “Mad Oh” with The Cavemen.

    In mainstream afrobeats, taking four to five years to release a project, while stabilising an identity, is usually a risky artistic route, especially if you aren’t a Big 3. Many music consumers have expressed frustration with albums spanning more than 15 tracks, but SABALI’s 52-minute runtime is an easy listen and barely grating. Titled SABALI for a reason, the album fully rewards patience.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    1. catharsis — FOLA

    As often seen in music around the world, first albums are mostly either trailblazers and propellers or disasters. FOLA’s first EP, what a feeling, and the public’s reception made it apparent that the 24-year-old singer-songwriter is ready to deliver a major killer debut project, rather than a first-time guillotine that takes him to slaughter. And not only is catharsis the best album of 2025, but as a music project that’s two minutes short of what the traditional industry term ‘album’ implies, it reiterates that artists are the deciders of what is conventional or not, norm or not, hot or not.

    FOLA has had a great year: he’s the biggest breakout act of the year, released a widely-acclaimed and longest-running No. 1 album of the year, top-charting songs, threw his first sold-out (and overcrowded) headlining show, and is the top-lover boy in afrobeats this year. Thanks to a personal and emotionally-driven music that brings his romance and self-reflection to the forefront of his songwriting. Across catharsis, FOLA fully embraces his pop-star, though the pressures of rising stardom are inescapable.

    afrobeats-infused r&b drives the grooves of most of the tracks, which move between romantic complexity and ambition. When there’s a break in mood on “disco” featuring Young Jonn, the album shifts from introspective tension to a lighter performance.

    What’s next for FOLA after such a fruitful year is consistency, quality and breaking into a new artistic peak that keeps him above streams and popularity.

    Listen: Apple Music | Spotify

    Honourable mentions:

    Detox — Sewà

    Journey Through Life — Femi Kuti

    Viva La Vida — Joeboy

    Omoboy — PayBac iBoro

    Greatly Exaggerated — Damon Grass

    Dream Man — Oyedele

    Files ‘26 — cosamote

    Vice Versa — President Zik and Hotyce

    No Excuses — Blaqbonez

    ALSO READ: The 10 Best Nollywood Movies Of 2025

  • Wizkid: Long Live Lagos, the first film production about Wizkid, signifies more than a documentary. It’s a meditation on place, memory, ambition and what it costs to carry a city and generation with you as you move through the world. Rather than tracing a rise-to-fame arc, the documentary portrays Lagos as both origin and burden, illustrating how the city’s beauty, struggles, condition, and contradictions are reflected in Wizkid’s music, work ethic, and worldview.

    From rehearsals to performances, reflections and other moments, the documentary reveals how Lagos continues to shape Wizkid long after global success. It shows community, creative responsibility and hard work behind the scenes.

    These are six things I picked from Wizkid: Long Live Lagos.

    The doc is about his Tottenham show

    This documentary’s storyline attempts to explore Wizkid’s legacy as thoroughly as possible, but the central theme is the show he performed at the Tottenham Stadium in 2024. Wizkid is the first artist to perform at the 60,000-person capacity stadium after Lady Gaga (2022) and Guns N’ Roses (2022).

    Wizkid performing there as the first African and Black artist is history, and this is the documentation of it, its significance and what it took to make it happen.

    It’s dedicated to his mum

    At the time of the concert planning, Wizkid’s mum had to start cancer treatment, meaning that she wouldn’t be able to attend the show. 

    A few weeks before the concert day, she died, leading many to believe that he’d cancel the show. However, he didn’t, and the show went on.

    The documentary title may give a special nod to Lagos, the city that made Wizkid, but it’s dedicated to his mother, whom he also named his latest album, Morayo, after.


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    Work and family

    Family follows Wizkid to work (almost) every time. Throughout the documentary, we see Jada Pollock — Wizkid’s manager of eight years, partner of six years, and mother of two of his children — and their young child, who’s too young to be left alone, moving in proximity. The doc also shows Jada giving a glimpse into their work process, and how they merge work and family.

    The Cavemen. are the show’s musical directors

    Nigerian Highlife duo, The Cavemen., handled the show’s musical direction for the rehearsal and live performance.


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    Starboy travelled out for the first time

    Don’t get it mixed up: the Starboy here isn’t Wizkid himself, nor the Canadian singer The Weeknd, who also called himself that one time. The Starboy in discussion here is a big fan of Wizkid, a mechanic, car rider, and drifter, who made his way to the U.K. just to watch his favourite artist perform.

    The focus on Starboy, his decision to travel to the UK to witness Wizkid make history, and obtaining his visa just in time for the show, may seem too performative and convenient, given the difficulty of obtaining a visa in Nigeria. But it also shows how much die-hard fans will ride for favourite artists.

    The doc spotlights Dencity

    Dencity is a women-focused skateboard initiative in Lagos, founded by Blessing Ewona, who’s also the DJ known as WEARECHEMICALS. There’s no particular tie or story about this group in the documentary. Still, it is recognised in its exploration of how young, creative Nigerians are taking agency and shaping their own future.


    ALSO READ: We Ranked All of Wizkid’s Albums from ‘Meh’ to Greatest


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  • Every year, the Nigerian music scene pulls off a miracle: it births a new generation of artists who altogether redefine the soundscape, challenge the old guard and give us new songs to obsess over. From Afrobeats to alternative, street-pop, R&B to hip-hop, 2026 is shaping up to be a year of creative and boundary-pushing artists.

    I’ve done the search, sifting through the independent releases, the sleeper hits and the underground gems to identify important voices.

    These are the ten Nigerian artists who should be on your radar: rising stars and underrated talents whose music, style and vision promise to make them impossible to ignore.

    Jamz FR

    What makes Jamz FR exciting is her fusion of styles and her ability to navigate between bangers and introspective tunes. She taps into the essence of Afropop while layering in influences from R&B and reggae‑tinged vocal styles. When artistry is rooted in authentic experiences and a lifelong love of music, you’ll get songs with clarity and heart like “Sober”, “Lose Ya” and her latest “Jamzy Vibe.”

    Reehaa

    Reehaa stands out because she brings a female presence to a space often dominated by male streetpop acts. She has a music style grounded in both tradition and contemporary youth expression. She writes about real experiences and youthful perspectives in ways that feel relatable to her generation, not as an imitation but as an authentic voice of her own. Her songs often blend Yoruba and Pidgin English and lends her music cultural depth and broad appeal.

    Her music carries both upbeat tracks and more introspective ones. Her recent singles, such as “Sati Ramoni” and collaborations with artists like Shallipopi and DJ Neptune, demonstrate her growing confidence, versatility and relevance. She’s increasingly seen not just as a rising woman in music, but as a contender shaping the future of Nigerian Street-Pop.


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    Musta4a

    The velvety falsetto of Musta4a’s voice distinguishes him from his peers in the Nigerian contemporary music scene. Across Afropop, R&B and those hazy, soul-leaning pockets where emotions reside, he operates with ease. Though he’s a lover at heart, his songwriting stitches reflection and youthful exuberance that feel admiringly dreaming or lived in. Both approaches work for him.

    His latest release, Musty & Yugo Vol. 1, an EP with Yugoszn, is proof of his instincts for forward-thinking collaborations and his ability to create chemistry. He’s growing his catalogue, he’s signed to a major publisher (Sony Music Publishing (West Africa)), and momentum is gathering around him. All these suggest one thing: a fuller evolution is on the horizon, and next year might be when it finally tips.

    Abstraktt

    Abtraktt’s journey from underground releases to broader acclaim shows a creative restlessness that refuses to sit still. His music weaves hip-hop, trap, and afrobeats to convey everyday experiences. Abstraktt’s first EP, The Yellow Tape, marks a turning point and showcases his ability to shift between introspective storytelling and high‑energy tracks that groove just as hard as his lyrical raps. His latest, Uncle Yellow, showcases his approach as rhythm‑forward hip‑hop that favours versatility over genre limits.

    With a growing catalogue that resonates with a broad audience and a knack for memorable hooks, Abstraktt is an artist worth watching as he pushes his Hip‑Hop style into 2026 and beyond.

    Elestee

    From her early appearances opening for Ladipoe to her breakthrough releases, Elestee has demonstrated a range across styles, blending rap with Afropop. Her debut projects, Lifesize Teddy and POISN, showcase her lyrical ability, vocal flexibility and willingness to cross genre lines. Tracks like “Space”, featuring Ajebo Hustlers, have become some of her most-streamed songs, helping establish her presence in the Nigerian music landscape.

    Elestee can deliver tight rap verses, shift into sung choruses and adapt her voice to different moods. She refines her sound with every release. Her recent EP, Mentally I’m Here, marks another step in her journey, showcasing her growth and her determination to seize her moment.


    READ NEXT: The 2025 Nigerian Songs Getting Nigerians Through the Year


    Syntax, The Creator

    Ibadan remains a breeding ground for alternative artists and musicians experimenting with music in a constantly evolving way. Syntax, The Creator is one of those artists and he makes music that takes listeners into spaces of introspection, celebration and creative expansiveness.

    His Room 203 (2024) and Rvivi (2025) EPs express this vividly, with collaborations and features that expand his sound. If experimentation is where your interests lie, this singer-producer is always ready to turn “What if..?” into “What is” with his music.

    Fimi

    Versatility sets Fimi apart. One moment, she’s dropping compelling, braggadocious and sensual rap verses. Next, she has flown into melodic hooks and artsy performances into her visuals, displaying the traits of zeitgeist hip-hop. She’s a new voice contributing to a growing space for authentic female participation in Nigerian Hip-Hop. In 2026, Fimi is an artist to watch.


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    oSHAMO

    As Afrobeats expands, the most recent releases are fusions that incorporate other styles. oSHAMO is a new artist at the heart of this approach. Born in Lagos and now based in the UK, his music seamlessly mixes Afrobeat, Fuji, Amapiano, and hip-hop with exciting melodies that carry the heart of Nigerian musical heritage into new sonic spaces. His debut EP First of My Kind maps his journey from Agege to London and marks him as a storyteller as much as a performer.

    On his new EP, I D R I S, he gets personal and transitions to both infectious dance-floor moments and introspective narratives. In his own way, he serves as a cultural bridge, threading the soul of Lagos into London’s global soundscape.

    Sewà 

    Sewà grounds her music in Afro-soul, but with the gleams of R&B, jazz and pop. It’s a rich fusion that carries both mainstream and niche circles in its arms, but the speciality of Sewà’s music lies in her stories. She backs it up with her debut album, Detox. Every song is a sincere narrative, whether examining love, loss, reflection or personal growth. 

    With sold-out shows both in Toronto and Nigeria, including stage performances with established artists like Asa and The Cavemen., Sewà is emerging as one of the new, bold voices of alternative music in this part of the world.

    Zaylevelten

    Zaylevelten is one of Nigeria’s most compelling emerging voices in rap and alternative Afro‑fusion. He fuses street energy, trap influence and experimental sound into something distinctly his own. Zaylevelten’s breakout came through a series of strong releases and viral moments, especially a track like “Maye.” This song helped him build a loyal fanbase that connects with his unpolished and laid-back delivery.

    He doesn’t chase trends, he shapes them, with glitchy trap styles, sharp flows and beats that defy easy categorisation. That experimental edge places him at the forefront of a new underground movement in Nigerian music. A key part of what makes Zaylevelten stand out is his work as a producer under the name Tenski. He plays a major role in crafting his own sound, producing much of his material, and ensuring identity, self-sufficiency and that the music reflects his vision from the ground up.

    His recent project, 1t g0t crazy and its deluxe version, showcase his off‑kilter experimentation and street‑aware confidence, with features that also signal his growing influence.


    ALSO READ: 10 Nigerian Music Projects That Deserved More Love in 2025


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  • Detty December is here and we all know what that means: holiday, endless parties, markets run and more food than you can stomach. But only true Nigerians will ace this quiz, can you?

    Take this test:

    Which is an ingredient of Detty December’s signature meal in Nigeria?

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  • Some Nollywood characters walk off the screen with stories so compelling, chaotic or complex that one movie simply isn’t enough. They hint at the possibilities of bigger worlds, deeper histories and untold stories waiting to be explored.

    From unforgettable villains to quietly powerful women rewriting their stories, these are the characters whose lives deserve spin-offs, because their stories are far from finished.

    Agbekoya and Prince Aderopo from October 1

    Kunle Afolayan’s October 1 already hints at an early friendship, shared trauma and deeper class and psychological difference between the local farmer Agbekoya (Kunle Afolayan) and the aristocratic, psychopathic Prince Aderopo (Demola Adedoyin). A spin-off could expand both men’s inner worlds: a young Agbekoya and Prince Aderopo’s time at the missionary boarding school, descent into trauma, sexual molestation at the hands of the Reverend Father and the different ways both characters turn out. All this happening against the backdrop of Nigeria’s pre-independence contradictions will make a rich movie.

    Gift from Gangs of Lagos

    Gift (Adesua Etomi-Wellington) is a fascinating character in Gangs of Lagos. She’s a fiercely loyal fighter and street-babe shaped by the brutal politics of Isale Eko. The movie shows her as a survivor, a strategist and the emotional backbone of her friend group, but it only barely touches on her story.

    A spin-off built around Gift could explore how she met Obalola and Ify, learned to navigate the underworld, the wars she fought before Obalola’s rise and how she built credibility in a male-dominated street hierarchy. With her mix of vulnerability, violence and authority, Gift has all the ingredients needed for her own gritty, character-driven action drama.


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    Idia from To Kill A Monkey

    In To Kill a Monkey, Lilian Afegbai’s Idia is the show’s quiet storm. She’s a calculating fixer who understands the real engines of street and power more than Oboz, the criminal husband (Bucci Franklin), she serves. A spin-off for her character could explore her life before she meets Oboz: background story, early start in Edo, moral grey zones, the journey to Oboz and how she survives in the underworld and environments built to silence her if need be.

    Idia has a composure, ruthlessness and emotional mystery that writes the story itself. A thriller led by a woman who knows everything but says nothing.

    Jedidiah from A Tribe Called Judah

    Jedidah Judah (Funke Akindele) is the glue holding the wildly dysfunctional Judah family together. She’s a hustling single mother whose life is a masterclass in survival, sacrifice and willpower. A Tribe Called Judah shows her juggling five sons from five different fathers, endless financial pressure, and the emotional labour of keeping a home that never seems to stop burning.

    There should be A Tribe of Judah’s prequel mini-series dedicated to Jedidah. Each episode could chronicle her character’s relationship with each of her children’s fathers. It’s something that is touched briefly in the movie but never fleshed out.


    READ NEXT: 8 Nigerian Historical Events that Deserve Movie Adaptations


    Kazeem from Gangs of Lagos

    Kazeem, played by Olarotimi Fakunle, is one of the most compelling villains in modern Nollywood. He’s a street and political enforcer who evolves into a political kingmaker controlling Isale Eko’s underworld. His spin-off could trace the power vacuum that allowed him to rise, the alliances he formed, the political machinery that enabled him, and the personal losses that hardened him into the man we meet in the movie. Think of a Lagos crime saga about how a boy from the slums became the most feared man in the city.

    Liz Benson in Diamond Ring

    The main character in the movie is a teenager who goes to school and joins a grave-robbing cult. They rob the grave of a rich AF woman whose name we never get (Liz Benson) and share the loot that she was buried with. The main character gets Liz Benson’s diamond ring (which he sells) and because it’s the thing that mattered the most to her in life, she decides to haunt the fuck out of him and his family, triggering a hunt for the ring that takes them across the world. 

    Liz is dead at the start and only shows up to angrily ask where her ring is. It’s amazing and you should watch it for fun. The spin-off should be a prequel showing who Liz was she alive, why the diamond ring was so special and why she has all these powers in death.

    Makanaki from King of Boys

    Makanaki, played by Reminisce, is one of Nollywood’s most iconic modern villains. He’s a brutal, charismatic, street-hardened figure who rebels against the political and criminal establishment that underestimates him. Makani’s rise from errand boy to feared warlord would make an exhilarating spin-off.

    The movie could go into the gang wars, betrayals, and political manipulations that shaped him, as well as the personal story beneath the chaos. Makanaki carries enough myth, swagger and unpredictability to carry an entire movie about him.


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    Ogundiji from Jagun Jagun

    Ogundiji (Femi Adebayo) is a master warrior, sorcerer and warlord whose war academy shapes the fate of kingdoms. But Jagun Jagun only scratches the surface of his origin. A spin-off could show how he came to have his mystical powers, built his army, enforced fear across territories and became the dark mirror of everything a warrior could be. Since it’s situated in Yoruba myth, this spin-off could be another Nollywood’s expansive fantasy epic, after Anikulapo and Lisabi, centred on ambition, conquest and the corruptive nature of power.

    Saro from Anikulapo

    Saro’s (Kunle Remi) arc goes from being a wandering cloth weaver to a man who gains and misuses the power to resurrect the dead. A spin-off could allow for a deeper dive and follow his childhood and his travels before arriving in Oyo. If made in the folklore-rich pattern of the Anikulapo movie and sequel series, Saro’s tale could expand the epic universe.

    Scar from Shanty Town

    Scar (Chidi Mokeme) is the heart of Shanty Town. A gangster, cult leader, trafficker and political tool to the core. His ruthlessness masks a strategic intelligence shaped by hardship. A spin-off about his early life; how he builds his criminal empire, his political networks and the personal demons that makes him a villain both feared and worshipped.


    ALSO READ: Nigerian Reality TV Shows that Need to Make a Comeback


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  • The Detty December Fest is officially kicking off the countdown to its 2025 celebration in Lagos, Nigeria, with the highly anticipated announcement of its first wave of global headliners.

    African and International Stars Set the Stage

    Solidifying its position as a cultural powerhouse, the festival has secured an incredible roster featuring both international hip-hop giants and leading African talents. The entire month-long event, running from December 7th to 31st, will be hosted at Ilubirin, Ikoyi, Bourdillion Road and the Livespot Entertarium, Oba Elegushi Beach Road, Lekki, Lagos. Detty December Fest is ready to provide an unforgettable open-air coastal setting for the performances.

    Fans can look forward to seeing multi-platinum selling American rapper, Busta Rhymes, a Hip-Hop icon, Bella Shmurda, Nigerian street-pop sensation, Juma Jux, Bongo Flava star from Tanzania.

    Performance & Programming Schedule (First Wave):

    Sat, Dec 6 — Grand Opening Concert (Aerial Show) [Ticket Link]

    Sun, Dec 7 — Grand Opening Show: A Cinematic Live Experience [Ticket Link]

    Sun, Dec 14 — Club X: The Beat Never Sleeps [Ticket Link]

    Thu, Dec 18 — Juma Jux Live in Concert [Ticket Link]

    Fri, Dec 19 — Busta Rhymes Live in Concert [Ticket Link]

    Sat, Dec 20 — Christmas Like a Movie (Variety Show) [Ticket Link]

    Sun, Dec 21 — Detty December Fest: One Night. Infinite Energy. [Ticket TBC]

    Sun, Dec 28 — Gunna Live in Concert. [Ticket TBC]

    Tue, Dec 30 — Last Call For… The Ultimate Detty December Rave [Ticket TBC]

    (Additional artists, surprise guests, and programming will be announced soon.)

    Exclusive Government Endorsement

    Adding significant weight to the event’s stature, the press release included an exclusive message from Minister Hannatu Musawa, the Minister of Art, Culture & the Creative Economy. Minister Musawa officially endorsed the festival, positioning it as a key strategic national platform

    About the Minister’s Message

    Minister Hannatu Musa Musawa’s video message recognises Detty December Fest as a defining contributor to Nigeria’s cultural ecosystem, spotlighting its role in strengthening Nigeria’s global creative presence and attracting holiday tourism.

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  • For Detty December 2025, we’ve rounded up ten Nollywood movies currently streaming on Netflix that deliver great stories, standout performances and entertainment that sticks with you long after the credits roll.

    This list cuts across genres and moods, ensuring there’s something for everyone. Here are the 10 best Nigerian movies to watch on Netflix this month.

    10. The Stand Up (2022)

    Running time: 1h 39m

    Director: Jide ‘JBlaze’ Oyegbile

    Genre: Drama

    Ovie (Paul Olope) is just a Warri guy trying to manage life as a security guard with his dad. But everything scatters when his father is murdered, and the town’s resident big bad, Devwor (Richard Mofe-Damijo), shows up to collect a ₦2 million debt Ovie didn’t even know existed. To make things worse, Devwor abducts Ovie’s sister as collateral.

    With nothing but panic propelling him, Ovie runs to Lagos to rescue her. Instead, he walks straight into the wild world of stand-up comedy after bumping into a talent manager (Mofe Duncan) who swears Ovie has potential.

    Watch The Stand Up on Netflix.

    9. Strangers (2022)

    Running time: 1h 58m

    Director: Biodun Stephen

    Genre: Drama

    Based on true events, Strangers tells the story of Ade (Lateef Adedimeji) whose life hits pause after a serious illness and personal loss. Feeling stuck, he writes a letter to a mysterious benefactor, spilling his heart and sharing how random strangers ended up shaping his journey in ways he never expected.

    We see Ade go from fragile to fighting for his life and future, with his mother’s steady love and strangers’ kindness.

    Watch Strangers on Netflix.


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    8. Tokunbo (2024)

    Running time: 1h 52m

    Director: Ramsey Noauh

    Genre: Drama, Thriller

    Tokunbo (Gideon Okeke) thought he had left the chaos behind. Once a notorious car smuggler, he traded fast cars and danger for family provisions. But the dark world doesn’t let you sleep that easily. When his young son falls seriously ill, Tokunbo finds himself dragged back into the orbit of Gaza (Chidi Mokeme), the old boss whose shadow still haunts him.

    Tokunbo ends up tasked with delivering Nike (Darasimi Nnadi), the kidnapped daughter of a government official, straight into the hands of criminals. But this isn’t just a crime job, it’s a reckoning. Every move forces Tokunbo to weigh survival against the life he promised himself he’d leave behind.

    Watch Tokunbo on Netflix.

    7. Breaded Life (2021)

    Running time: 2h

    Director: Biodun Stephen

    Genre: Comedy Drama

    Breaded Life takes the usual “rich kid gets a reality check” story and throws it out the window with laughs and tears. Sunmisola (Timini Egbuson) wakes up one day to the weirdest situation ever: no one remembers who he is, except Todowede (Bimbo Ademoye), a bread hawker.

    Sunmisola, confused and heartbroken, navigates a world where his identity and worth are gone while relying on someone he probably would’ve ignored before.

    Watch Breaded Life on Netflix.

    6. Before Valentine’s (2022)

    Running time: 1h 51m

    Director: Michelle Bello

    Genre: Romance

    Set almost entirely in a buzzing women’s salon, this movie follows four hairstylists (Uche Montana, Meg Otanwa, Bolaji Ogunmola, and Ben Lugo Touitou) whose love lives become unstable as Valentine’s Day approaches. From an effeminate partner to juicy secrets, they all have relationship pressure that’d make even a blow dryer look dramatic.

    The salon in Before Valentine’s becomes more than a place to curl and straighten hair. Here, lies spill, friendships get tested and messy decisions get made.

    Watch Before Valentine’s on Netflix.


    READ NEXT: The 10 Best Nollywood Movies to Watch On YouTube (December 2025)


    5. All Na Vibes (2021)

    Running time: 1h 20m

    Director: Taiwo Egunjobi

    Genre: Drama, Thriller

    In Ibadan, three youths get into trouble during their school strike. Abiola (Tega Ethan), a wannabe musician, Lamidi (Molawa Davis), the troublemaker who brings chaos wherever he goes, and Sade (Tolu Osaile), the quiet rich girl with a politician dad.

    One day, the trio decides to throw a house party just to feel alive. But the vibes they’re chasing quickly turn messy. What starts as a carefree party becomes a wild lesson in power, politics and consequences.

    Watch All Na Vibes on Netflix.

    4. A Lot Like Love (2023)

    Running time: 1h 35m

    Director: Shitty Taiwo

    Genre: Thriller

    Fanna (Rahama Sadau) thinks she’s just going on a chill romantic getaway with her husband and her dad’s right-hand man, Abdul (Ibrahim Suleiman). But nothing is ever smooth. Before they can even unpack, kidnappers crash the party, and instantly, their perfect getaway becomes a full-blown nightmare.

    With Abdul in danger, Fanna becomes the unlikely hero. And she plans to lean on her ride-or-die friend (Sophia Alakija) and get some backup from an ex (Gabriel Afolayan) who’s clearly still carrying feelings.

    Watch A Lot Like Love on Netflix.

    3. King of Boys (2018)

    Running time: 2h 49m

    Director: Kemi Adetiba

    Genre: Action, Thriller

    King of Boys demands attention, just like its main character, Eniola Salami (Sola Sobowale). She’s a businesswoman and a political player whose power and influence stretch from boardrooms to Lagos’ dark streets. She runs it all with ruthless precision. But chasing legitimacy in a world built on crime comes with consequences.

    The heavy cost of power tests Eniola at every turn, forcing her to prove she’s not just surviving but thriving in a man’s world that wants to see her fall.

    Watch King of Boys on Netflix.


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    2. Jagun Jagun (2023)

    Running time: 2h 31m

    Director: Tope Adebayo and Adebayo Tijani

    Genre: Action, Drama, Epic

    Jagun Jagun is a sweeping epic that dives deep into power, loyalty and the weight of legacy. At its centre is Ogundiji (Femi Adebayo), a formidable warrior whose rise in the kingdom is marked by both brutality.

    When ambition, magic, and political intrigue collide, Ogundiji clashes with one of his young soldiers and warriors, Gbotija (Lateef Adedimeji). Their enmity strips Ogundiji of his mystery and puts Gbotija at a respectable rank in the military.

    Watch Jagun Jagun on Netflix.

    1. Devil Is A Liar (2025)

    Running time: 2h 17m

    Director: Moses Inwang

    Genre: Drama, Thriller

    Adaora Philips (Nse Ikpe-Etim) has built a life rooted in success and stability, but everything tilts the moment she falls for Jaiye (James Gardiner). Jaiye is a charming younger man whose warmth slowly gives way to something far more sinister. Their relationship goes from deep romance into a suffocating marriage tainted by control, lies and a shocking violation that alters Adaora’s body and sense of self forever.

    As the truth of Jaiye’s manipulation surfaces, Adaora turns to the only constants she has left: her sisters, Beatrice (Padita Agu) and Cheta (Nancy Isime). She leans on their courage to rebuild after being broken.

    Watch Devil Is A Liar on Netflix.


    ALSO READ: The 10 Best Nollywood Romcom Series to Watch on Youtube

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  • Lakowe Lake turned into a whole Parad-Ice getaway for the weekend. Smirnoff Ice brought the drinks and holiday energy, bringing people together including the Smirnoff Ice BBN Originals such as Imisi, Dede, Koyin and Jason Jae, giving them three days of enjoyment, splash and getaway.

    From pool parties to paint-and-sip, here’s a look at how the Smirnoff Ice Escape experience went down.

    Unlimited drinks and food

    As soon as we rolled in, there was a surplus of Smirnoff Ice cocktails. There were snacks everywhere, with rooms for relaxation. Smirnoff Ice sets the mood; to sip, chill and repeat. It instantly feels like a holiday.

    Movie night

    The first night hits differently when the movie is shown under the stars. It was laid-back, perfect to wind down before the hustle of the next day. 

    Paint-and-sip

    Creativity got its moment too. There was a paint-and-sip session with the Smirnoff Ice BBN Original winners. It was artsy and fun.

    Golf game

    After breakfast on the second day, things got sporty. There was a great session that added a touch of class to the getaway. It was a morning on the green that gave everyone a breather.

    Pool party

    The Smirnoff Ice pool party was the peak of this getaway. It was splashes, music and laughter, all under the Lakowe Lakes skies.

    Picnic

    Before the Smirnoff Ice Party ended, the brand took things up a notch with a grand appreciation picnic for everybody who helped make the 3-day getaway a reality. It was all gratitude, hugs, toasts and shared memories.

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  • If you know the right corners of the internet, you’ll discover that some of the best of Nollywood is streaming on YouTube.

    I know why you have come. Consider your search for the best of Nollywood on YouTube this December officially over. I have done a deep dive and curated 10 enjoyable Nigerian movies that not only cut through the digital noise but are also diverse in terms of genre. These movies, from work drama to complex tales of love, are guaranteed to elevate your viewing experience this December.

    Enjoy.

    10. A Not So Perfect Match (2024)

    Running time: 2h 7m

    Director: Mo Fakorede

    Genre: Romance

    Returning home after years spent abroad, Moses (Eso Dike) is ready to start a completely new chapter of his life. His path immediately aligns with that of Deborah, a woman navigating her own way to find stability. As they meet, their burgeoning relationship is subjected to the harsh test of hidden truths, unaddressed past wounds and surprising connections.

    These revelations challenge everything they once held certain regarding faith, love and second chances. They either pursue fate or allow their chance at love to slip away.

    Watch A Not So Perfect Match on YouTube.

    9. In the Name of Love (2025)

    Running time: 1h 33m

    Director: Isioma Osaji

    Genre: Romance

    A clandestine romance ignites when Michelle (Osas Ighodaro), the protected daughter of a powerful dynasty, encounters Andrew (Eso Dike), a captivating newcomer defined by his own enigma. Their romance flourishes under the cover of fabricated identities. However, their relationship is almost shattered when their real identities come out.

    Confronted by family’s expectations, the couple must choose between their powerful backgrounds or risk it all for love.

    Watch In the Name of Love on YouTube.


    Subscribe to Zikoko Pop newsletter, The Feed, for the most important pop culture news


    8. Christmas Between Worlds (2025)

    Running time: 1h 43m

    Director: Jay Isi Bewaji

    Genre: Romance

    Life is hitting Emeka (Michael Dappa) below the belt. The weight of the Christmas season isn’t helping either. But one day, he finds himself in a world that feels only vaguely familiar. Everything about this new reality — set against the backdrop of Christmas — compels him to slow down and enters into a journey of healing, rediscovery and a quiet joy he didn’t know he was missing.

    Watch Christmas Between Worlds on YouTube.

    7. I Get To Love You (2025)

    Running time: 2h 6m

    Director: Uduak Patrick

    Genre: Romance

    Propelled by a series of misfortunes, Tiwa (Detola Jones) is abruptly pulled from her sheltered village existence and thrown into the bustling chaos of Lagos. In this unfamiliar environment, she’s drawn into a world miles removed from hers.

    An encounter with a charismatic man she likes (Chris Attoh) forces her to reevaluate everything she once believed about loyalty, destiny, and the true meaning of love. As feelings grow fonder, Tiwa needs to decide whether to maintain a delicate balance between the principled life she left behind or stick to her new identity.

    Watch I Get To Love You on YouTube.

    6. Never Far Away (2025)

    Running time: 1h 26m

    Director: Debola Santa Ogunshina

    Genre: Drama 

    When the marriage of their cherished mutual friends deteriorates, two bitter exes, Theresa (Teniola Aladese) and Shola (Tayo Arimoro), are forced to collaborate to help the couple (Wendy Lawal and Gabriel Afolayan). Yet as Theresa and Shola dedicate themselves as counsellors and mediators, they arrive at the crucial realisation that their friends aren’t the only ones who need healing. They need it too.

    Watch Never Far Away on YouTube.


    READ NEXT:  The 10 Best Nollywood Heist Movies on Netflix and Other Streamers


    5. The Mask (2025)

    Running time: 1h 36m

    Director: Sunny Peters

    Genre: Comedy, Drama

    Kay (Tioluwalogo Olakunbi-Black) and Jay (Ibitoye Ayodele) are two friends, dressed in suits, on their way to an appointment. But their crucial morning gets derailed by Kay’s extended prayer session and an impromptu visit from their pastor.

    When they finally manage to depart, their destination isn’t an interview or their jobs, but a scheduled appointment with a babalawo, who’s preparing a potent ritual intended to guarantee their success. Just as their ritual is about to be finalised, they run into luck. They abandon the ritual, but not without consequences.

    Watch The Mask on YouTube.

    4. Cafe Edebiri (2025)

    Running time: 1h 25m

    Director: Great Valentine Edochie

    Genre: Romance

    Imade (Bolaji Ogunmola) moves back to her dad’s house to take care of him. Her dad, Pa Edebiri (Nkem Owoh) has a dream of turning their family house into “Cafe Edebiri.” But death cuts short his dream.

    After Pa Edebiri’s demise, Imade tries to honour his memory to fulfil his cafe dream. However, it isn’t easy; she has to find a deal that works for her. But first, she has to reconcile with Alero (Tina Mba), her estranged mother, and sort out internal family issues.

    Watch Cafe Edebiri on YouTube.

    3. Stay With Me (2023)

    Running time: 1h 56m

    Director: Emma Anyaka

    Genre: Drama

    After a short, heated exchange between Lola (Pamela Okoye) and a Kachi (Eddie Watson) on her way to work, he turns out to be her new boss. She arrives at the office to resume her role as his personal assistant, but he’s cold towards her.

    The more she tries to get closer to and please him, the more difficult it becomes.

    Watch Stay With Me on YouTube.


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    2. Laraba and Balarabe (2025)

    Running time: 30m

    Director: Fatima Binta Gimsay

    Genre: Romance

    Balarabe (Mallum Arik), an emotional manipulator, unexpectedly appears at Laraba’s (Susan Pwajok) door months after he ended their relationship. His reason? He missed his flight, he’s stranded, and correctly calculated that Laraba is emotionally accessible enough to allow him into her space.

    Laraba, still heartbroken, uses the single day they spend together to desperately try to piece together the truth behind why he left, while he requests some spicy noodles.

    Watch Laraba and Balarabe on YouTube.

    1. The Last Days of Always (2025)

    Running time: 2h 10m

    Director: Kingsley Fresh Onyenma

    Genre: Romance

    As much as this is a love story, it’s a race against the clock. We meet Cathy (Sandra Okunzuwa), a quiet and selfless nurse who’s secretly grappling with a life-changing, terminal diagnosis.

    Her illness hits just as she starts a relationship with Manny Benson (Uzor Arukwe). On the other hand, Manny’s life is just beginning as Cathy’s time starts to fade.

    Watch The Last Days of Always on YouTube.


    ALSO READ: 10 Best Nollywood Short Films To Watch on YouTube

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  • If your fingers bleed from scrolling the internet or you keep tabs on the latest celebrity gist, this quiz is for you.

    If you don’t get 10/13, just delete your social media accounts and go and focus on yourself.

    Take this test:

    Which of these Nigerian celebs wasn’t at the MET Gala?

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